• Home
  • Contact

Results Details

"pity "

Book 7. (1 results) Captive of Gor (Individual Quote)

I pity them. - (Captive of Gor, Chapter 17, Sentence #104)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 104 I pity them.

Book 7. (7 results) Captive of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
17 101 I found I was now the victim, the prisoner, of "slave needs".
17 102 I now understood how girls could weep and scratch at the walls of their kennels, how they could squirm, moaning, shackled in their pens, how they could press their face and flesh against the cruel bars that confined them in their tiny cages, moistening the obdurate, grasped steel with their tears.
17 103 How can a free woman even understand this? But I do not envy free women.
17 104 I pity them.
17 105 Slave needs were now frequently upon me, profoundly, irresistibly.
17 106 They now arose in me with the regularity and power of tides, carrying me, willing or not, upon them.
17 107 In their grasp I found myself, Elinor Brinton, no more than an aroused, needful slave.
I found I was now the victim, the prisoner, of "slave needs". I now understood how girls could weep and scratch at the walls of their kennels, how they could squirm, moaning, shackled in their pens, how they could press their face and flesh against the cruel bars that confined them in their tiny cages, moistening the obdurate, grasped steel with their tears. How can a free woman even understand this? But I do not envy free women. I pity them. Slave needs were now frequently upon me, profoundly, irresistibly. They now arose in me with the regularity and power of tides, carrying me, willing or not, upon them. In their grasp I found myself, Elinor Brinton, no more than an aroused, needful slave. - (Captive of Gor, Chapter 17)